Archive for March, 2009

Planners’ concerns on Site Law updates in the Morning Sentinel

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

Last Monday, Main-Land Development Consultants‘ President/Owner Darryl Brown was invited to give an overview to the town of Farmington’s planning board on his concerns about the changes to the Site Location of Development Law. Darryl received this request from the board’s chair, who had attended Main-Land’s Farmington forum on the site law changes and was very concerned with what he heard. Betty Jespersen, a reporter from the Morning Sentinel who has covered the county for more than two decades, was at that Monday night board meeting, and wrote an extensive story for the Saturday Sentinel about Main-Land’s quest to bring awareness to the proposed changes, and the concerns of town planner as to what the impact might be if these updates are approved by the Maine Legislature.

You can link to her story here, or read it below.

Land-use rule bill worries officials
By Betty Jespersen, Morning Sentinel Staff Writer

FARMINGTON — A proposed change to development rules by the Maine Department of Environmental Protection is a significant concern for the chairman of Farmington’s Planning Board.

“The changes are extensive enough … that we felt there should be more discussion,” said Chairman L. Herbert “Bussie” York.

One change would direct large-scale commercial and residential projects — a pellet mill, a Lowe’s Home Center or a 30-plus-lot subdivision — to be built within a town’s commercial center or designated growth area.

That may not be that much of a problem for towns with state-approved comprehensive plans that include established areas for future growth.

Towns without a plan, however, could find the DEP deciding where development should go, according to Darryl Brown, owner of Main-Land Development Inc. of Livermore Falls.

The proposed changes also would increase a development’s buffer areas around sensitive land, add more requirements for subdivisions and give the DEP authority to approve or reject site contractors.

Brown spoke before the Planning Board last week. Andrew Fisk, director of the DEP’s Bureau of Land & Water Quality, also spoke.

“We are not a lobbying firm … but we are here to discuss public policy that we do not agree with,” Brown said. “Not all the changes proposed are negative, but we have picked out the most onerous, and we feel the negatives far outweigh the positives.”

Brown said an example of a project that probably would be rejected under the proposed rule change would be a large residential subdivision in the Carrabassett Valley area.

“The proposed restrictions that would limit that type of development would allow no disturbance of slopes greater than 20 percent,” he said. “That would prohibit the construction of many roads across slopes to provide access to higher elevations.” Other proposed changes, he said, would limit road and driveway grades to 8 percent. “That is totally unrealistic in mountainous terrain,” he said.

“In nearly four decades as a land planner, never have I been more worried about the impact of a piece of legislation than I am now,” Brown said.

DEP’s Fisk said the agency realizes that significant policy changes are being proposed, “but the vast majority of the rule changes are already in the law.”

Under the proposed legislation, if a community has no state-approved local comprehensive plan, large-scale projects could not be permitted in that town, Fisk said.

He said specifics of proposed rule changes, such as in buffers, setbacks and slopes, still are being worked out as public comments come in. He said the law and rules had not been modified for years. The agency decided to do a complete overhaul of the system, rather than doing it piecemeal, to present the public a comprehensive view of the law.

The site development law was created in the 1970s to regulate land development of large projects.

Farmington’s code enforcement officer, Steve Kaiser, agrees that the state planning process could use improvement — such as getting towns more help with their comprehensive plans — and said he would welcome that change.

“But making such substantial changes to such a long-standing law needs to be thoroughly vetted,” Kaiser said. “I think Farmington will be in good shape because we have such good local control. This will be more of a problem in the smaller towns that have not enacted good ordinances.”

Brown said the DEP has not done enough to get the word out to landowners, developers, town officials and communities. Meetings the agency held in Augusta and Portland were not well advertised and even his own office was not notified, he said.

Fisk said the public will have a chance to comment at later meetings and hearings.

“This is not about the state seizing authority,” he said. “We have had very constructive feedback during these meetings, and we will make changes and come up with responsible rules.”

Letter to the Editor of the Bethel Citizen on Site Law changes

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

Following our forum in Bethel on proposed changes to DEP’s site law, Main-Land Development’s President/Owner Darryl Brown sent a letter to the editor of the Bethel Citizen, expressing thanks for the outpouring of support we received at the forum, and continuing the call to challenge the MDEP proposal. It ran in the latest edition of the paper.

You can read his letter below, or link to it directly here on the Bethel Citizen’s website.

We will continue to write letters to our legislators and local media, and we encourage you to do the same. As we are already seeing, these efforts do make a major difference.

To the Editor,

On behalf of myself and my staff at Main-Land Development Consultants, we’d like to thank the 75 or so concerned citizens who attended our Feb. 25 forum co-sponsored by the Bethel Area Business Association on the Maine Department of Environmental Protection’s proposed revisions to the Site Location of Development Law and its related rules.

As I stressed during our presentation, never in my 37 years as a land use consultant have I been more concerned about the consequences of a piece of planning legislation than I am now. Based on our deep understanding of the current site law and our careful review of the proposed changes to it, I truly believe if these new initiatives are implemented, development in Maine will come to a standstill. In these trying economic times, our state leaders must be encouraging thoughtful, responsible growth in our communities, not outlawing it.

Many of the developers our firm works with throughout western Maine also live and recreate in the region, largely because they have a deep appreciation and respect for the area’s natural resources. Given this, they care just as much as the good folks at the Maine DEP do about protecting what makes western Maine so special. Recent growth in the greater Bethel area that has attracted many visitors and the important job and revenue opportunities that are created as a result while concurrently preserving the region’s resources is a testament to this. It also illustrates the effectiveness of the development laws already on the books. Sadly, many of the very projects that have been such a boom to the Bethel area in the past five years would have been flat-out prohibited under the proposed law and rule changes, without ever having been given a chance for review by the town’s planners.

Micromanaging a developer’s contractor list or requiring evidence of a loan or line of credit before a project is even approved doesn’t fulfill the Maine DEP’s stated mission to “protect and enhance the public’s right to use and enjoy the State’s natural resources.” Instead, it ties the hands of those looking to invest in our towns and robs local government of the control over their communities.

The fact that so many greater Bethel area citizens — from bankers to builders to Planning Board members — attended our forum speaks to the region’s clear commitment to its future and the smart growth that will ensure that future is a prosperous one. It is we the people who are the strongest stewards of our communities and as long as we continue to speak up, it will hopefully remain that way.

Darryl Brown
President/Owner Main-Land Development Consultants

Morning Sentinel showcases Main-Land series on Site Law changes

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

The Morning Sentinel ran a story in its Saturday paper about our next few forums in central and western Maine on the changes to Site Law. The story also mentions Main-Land Development Consultants‘ owner/president Darryl Brown’s invitation to present the impacts of the proposed changes at the Farmington Planning Board. We are so appreciative of the media coverage we’ve received thus far in the series and think it reflects just how important responsible land development is to Mainers. This is no small issue and the groundswell of support and interest we’ve seen around central and western Maine certainly proves that. You can read the article below, or link to it here.

Forums to explain land-use laws
BY BETTY JESPERSEN, Morning Sentinel Staff Writer

Upcoming public forums in Skowhegan and Kingfield and at the next Farmington Planning Board meeting will allow area residents to learn more about significant changes to Maine’s land-development policy being proposed by the state’s Department of Environmental Protection.

The forums around central and western Maine are being put on by Main-Land Development Consultants, a Livermore Falls-based land planning firm, in response to changes being proposed by the state to the Site Location of Development Law, said Darryl Brown, president/owner of Main-Land.

He said he initiated the series over concerns that the proposed changes to the law and rules could drastically slow down, if not stop, development in the state.

On Monday, the Farmington Planning Board will discuss the proposed changes at their meeting at 7 p.m. at the Farmington Municipal Building at 153 Farmington Falls Road.

The Skowhegan forum will be from 8 to 9:30 a.m. Thursday, March 19 at the Skowhegan Community Center at 39 Poulin Drive. And the Kingfield forum will be held from 8 to 9:30 a.m. Thursday, March 26 at Webster Hall at 38 School St.

The forums are all open to the public; coffee and light refreshments will be provided.

The forums held so far have been attended by town officials, community members, legislators, Realtors, bankers and developers. Representatives from the Maine DEP have also been invited.

Brown was invited to the Farmington Planning Board meeting by Chairman Herbert “Bussie” York.

York attended the forum held in Farmington earlier this month and said he found the changes so concerning that he asked Brown to meet with the town’s planners and other officials including selectmen.

The Act to Update the Site Location of Development Law, sponsored by Rep. Bob Duchesne (D-Hudson), is expected to be taken up by the Legislature this session, said Brown.

If enacted, it would limit large-scale, non-residential development to designated growth zones, urban compact zones, U.S. Census-designated growth areas or those areas served by public sewer. Meanwhile, if a residential development larger than 30 acres is proposed outside these zones, it would be classified as a “conservation subdivision” and at least 55 percent of the land area would have to be preserved, Brown said.

The law changes would also prohibit the disturbances of slopes 20 percent or greater, which could limit projects in Maine’s mountainous regions and it would give the state the authority to review proposed project contractors.


Home | About Us | Our Family | Planning | Surveying | Environmental Mapping | Soils Evaluation/Mapping | Engineering | Municipal Services | Environmental Site Assessment | Projects | Latest News | Forms | Client Area

The Latest News for Main-Land Development Consultants is proudly powered by WordPress